TIRES: Tires may be disposed at the Transfer Station based on the fees shown below.

Tire Type

Rim Size

Fee W/O Rim

Motorcycle

$2.00/ea

Automobile, Light Truck

19.5" or less

$3.00/ea

Truck

19.5" to 24.5"

$6.00/ea

Farm Implement

25" to 50"

$25.00/ea

Earth Moving Equipment

20.5x25 and larger

$50.00/ea

Shredded Tires

$250.00/ton

Bulk Tires

$250.00/ton

HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE PROGRAM

What is Household Hazardous Waste?

Some jobs around the home may require the use of products containing hazardous components. The used or leftover contents of such consumer products are known as household hazardous waste (HHW).

Americans generate 1.6 million tons of household hazardous waste per year. The average home can accumulate as much as 100 pounds of household hazardous waste. When improperly disposed of, the waste can create a potential risk to people and our environment. There are certain steps that people can take to reduce the amount of hazardous waste they generate and to ensure that those wastes are safely stored, handled and disposed of properly.

Disposal Guide for Household Hazardous Waste

To protect our environment, do not dispose of these types of items in the trash, in the sewer or on the ground.

Latex Paint disposal: Let the paint solidify by leaving the can open for a period of time. Once the paint has solidified, dispose of in the household trash.

Why is Proper Disposal Necessary?

Careless use and disposal of these substances contaminate our food, soil, water and air, and seriously threaten the health of plants, animals and people.

• Hazardous chemicals can “pass through” treatment processes, storm drains or landfills and be discharged into our environment. This occurs because wastewater treatment plants are not designed to remove hazardous chemicals from wastewater and storm drains can flow directly into water sources without any treatment at all.• HHW thrown into the garbage can injure workers during collection or mix with other chemicals when landfilled.• Groundwater used for drinking or irrigation can be contaminated when waste products are poured onto or seep into the ground.• HHW stored in homes or garages can endanger emergency personnel responding to fires or other accidents.

What Can You Do to Create Less Hazardous Waste?

• Use safer alternatives. Homemade window cleaner is as effective as commercial brands. Visitwww.marc.org/Environment/SolidWaste/pdfs/safercleaning.pdf for more safe alternatives.• Read labels and buy the product with the lowest level of warning on the label. For example, buy products with “caution” instead of “poison” on the label.• Buy the smallest amount you need for the job.• Use up what you have first.• If you can’t use it up, give it to someone who can.• Completely finish using products in containers before disposing. Clean, empty containers can be put in the trash.

Managing Household Hazardous Waste

Because of the potential risks associated with household hazardous wastes, it is important that people always use, store and dispose of materials containing hazardous substances safely.

1. Use and store products containing hazardous substances carefully to prevent any accidents at home. Never store hazardous products in food containers.2. Never mix leftover household hazardous waste with other products.3. DO NOT place hazardous material in your trash container, recycling container or in your yard waste container.4. Take household hazardous waste to a local collection program OR share leftover materials with neighbors, charities or government agencies.5. Recycling is an economical and environmentally sound way to handle some types of household hazardous waste such as used automobile batteries and oil.

HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE COLLECTION SCHEDULE

Who May Participate: Bonneville County Residents (proof of residency required)

Waste NOT Accepted: Latex paint. To dispose of latex paint, let the paint solidify by leaving the can open for a period of time. Once the paint becomes hard it can be disposed of in the household trash.